Ken RosenthalVerified account
@Ken_Rosenthal
Olivera’s signing bonus: $12M right upon agreement, $7.5M by Aug. 1, $8.5M by 12/31. Not known whether #Dodgers or #Braves paying balance.
BC the Braves medical staff has shown a great of history of understanding the health of its players
- Mac
- Uggla
- BJ
-Every pitcher we have destroyed
The Braves acquired an impact bat (potentially) at 3B, and the prize was certainly steep. It is silly to discount how cheap in terms of money Olivera is though. There is simply no other way the Braves could have gotten an ~800 OPS guy for 3B for so little salary commitment. Remember how excited everyone was when Hart rebuilt the international scouting department? Well, those guys obviously LOVE Olivera and think he can be that impact hitter in the middle of the lineup for the next 5 years this team so desperately needs.
Mark me down as one person that doesn't think this is a bad trade whatsoever. Olivera's remaining contract is VERY cheap, so they could still acquire an expensive piece for LF, C or an Ace...and possibly 2 expensive pieces.
If you can't evaluate their value now, then you also can't assume we fleeced the D-Backs for Toussaint. It works both ways.
As always, you're right and I'm wrong... cool
Im talking about something substantial to read. I think it would be an enjoyable read. You are listing a tiny sample of deals that have been made. I could research and bring up deals where non of the prospects do a thing. Did the Braves win the Denny Neagle trade? D-Backs win the Curt Schilling deal? Cubs win the Rick Sutcliffe deal?
It should be cheap, he's a injured 30 year old with no professional experience. I understand the point of view of the Braves getting a discount on the guy, but it cost them one of their top prospects and a top starting pitcher that is 24 years old. Penciling in an .800 OPS of Olivera is pretty optimistic.
I was not arguing with you. Chill out.
I was making a comment that I don't trust our medical staff at all
I like Wood, but please, spare me.
You're undervaluing Wood. He has performed far closer to Hamels and even Price than you think.
But being a workhorse doesn't matter in the playoffs. The gap between Hamels and Wood is bigger over the course of a full season than it is in a one-game scenario. Wood gives you pretty equivalent value in that case.
Olivera, best-case, is really more of a 2. He's not our big bat.
Wood is certainly close to Hamels. The difference being the durability of Hamels and how long he's done it. OTOH, Wood is performing similar to him at age 24, so you get Wood for several years (sounds painful) whereas you can only expect Hamels to be at his level for a couple/few more years.